| The pupil is twelve, attractive, withdrawn
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| In a midnight blue school uniform
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| Lips just a little too full for her face
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| Distant eyes full of space
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| In her posture no trace of coquette
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| No defiance
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| She fingers the frets looking forlorn
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| Crossing her legs where her tights have been torn
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| Starts as her mother comes into the room
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| And the afternoon grows still
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| And her mother feels chill
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| Shivers and buttons her coat
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| I gently correct the curve of her back
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| And open her book in the now-empty flat
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| At the classical piece I’ve had her prepare
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| And her arms are bare as she plays
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| And I draw back behind her ear
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| A few strands of hair gone astray
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| She shows me her bracelet, the lesson is done
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| I turn it around between finger and thumb
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| We sit face to face and it seems to me that
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| Her face is the face of a cat
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| And touching the place where her breasts will be
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| I press my hand flat
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| She comes into my lap, I turn her around
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| Her hands clasp my neck and her feet skim the ground
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| Her skirt travels up under my palm
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| But the pupil sits looking so calm
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| As if listening to the distant sound
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| Of a burglar alarm
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| What happened next it’s hard to recall
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| The guitar lesson left no traces at all
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| Now, from afar, it seems to resemble
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| A strange composition in oil
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| Of a man, a guitar, and an innocent little girl |